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new year, new word!


mint

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Wow, Eric, that is the most thorough explanation that anyone could have wished for and I hadn't realise that there were so many implications to la glottophobie!

But I did see Mélenchon, around the time of the general election, taking questions from journalists and pretending to not understand a question from a woman with a SW accent and then, to compound his error, asking for a question from someone who spoke French!

He was roundly condemned in the press for it but I guess he is just as arrogant as any other politician?

I myself have to be very careful how I pronounce words with "en" (as in mentir!) because around these parts, many people say it differently to the regular accent parisien[:)]

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Father Xmas put a great little book into my stocking this year, called a Shakespeare Insult Generator, based on the language of his plays and allowing a pick and mix approach.

I promise not to use these on any of our sensitive members, but here is an example which made I chuckle: musty puppy-headed ratsbane.

I wonder whether any of our in depth French speakers could translate this, Norman, perhaps?
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'glottophobie' good word, Mint. It should pass  into the english language too.
My favourites are 'bobologies', and cochonneries (which I think I've mentioned before.)
As for accents, 'pain' is pronounced 'ping' in the deep SW. And they always sound the final 'e' in a word as a sort of 'uh'. Plus a gutteral rolling 'r'.
I wonder where that comes from? Not the Geordies.

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There is an online Shakespearien insult generator that might tickle your fancy Wooly, how about "Thou beslubbering dread-bolted odiferous stench!" ?

Find it here

http://www.literarygenius.info/a3-shakespeare-insult-generator.htm

Try as I might, I can't make my links clickable though.
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Mint - I knew about bobos, but this is from an article from the local paper quoting our french doctor, when the grandson joined the family practise:
«Il y a beaucoup de bobologie mais il faut rester constamment en éveil

pour ne pas passer à côté de quelque chose de grave quand c'est grave.

Faire le bon diagnostic...».
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